Control
Under increasing pressure
Result: Singaporeans are given a few more rights, but so
far there's little sign to show that PM Lee Hsien Loong
is a liberal democrat. Far East Economic Review.
Sep 8, 2008
Pressure Builds on Singapores System
by Hugo Restall
During the National Day festivities last month, Singapore
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s gloomy prognosis
for the economy — a “bumpy year” ahead — was
overshadowed by even more dire warnings that the city state
is about to start running low on its main resource, people.
With an aging society and one of the lowest fertility
rates in the world at 1.29, the government is pulling out
all the stops, doubling the budget of baby-making incentives
to $1.13 billion.
Meanwhile, in order to make Singapore a more tolerant
and pluralistic place, political videos will be allowed,
as well as protests in a downtown park.
It’s all straight from the ruling People’s
Action Party’s standard playbook. Play up the anxiety
of a small nation beset on all sides, in need of a strong
government to take positive action to avert disaster.
Individual
citizens who are failing to live up to the expectations
of society need to be brought back into line.
At the same time, leaders are willing to give those citizens
a few of their rights back, as long as they are not used
to undermine harmony.
Since
Mr Lee took over the premiership in 2004, Singaporeans
have been watching for any sign
he plans to reform substantially
the authoritarian state created by his father, Singapore’s
founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.
So far there has been little indication that in his heart
the prime minister is a liberal democrat. But the system
of control is coming under increasing stress due to the
changing structure of society. A process of subtle change
will continue to be driven by pressure from below, rather
than a change of heart at the top.
Last
month’s gestures far fall short of lifting
what the opposition calls the climate of fear—past
experience, such as the detention of former Solicitor General
Francis Seow in 1988, suggests that retribution for challenging
the PAP can come in many forms, from bureaucratic harassment
to detention without trial under the Internal Security
Act.
The government is making a virtue out of necessity by
lifting the 10-year-old ban on making or showing political
films, and allowing political podcasts during election
campaigns. Oppositionists were successfully skirting the
restrictions, so that they only served to hamstring the
PAP's own efforts to utilise online media.
The
opening of a protest area is a token gesture, which no
doubt will be raised to deflect international
criticism
the next time police arrest dissident politician Chee Soon
Juan for illegal assembly. In that sense, the move suggested
that Mr. Chee’s campaign of civil disobedience is
causing some heartburn within the regime.
But
the real problem is not Mr. Chee — the stressors
on Singapore’s political machine lie elsewhere. The
PAP’s legitimacy has always rested on its performance,
backed by trust in the party.
Given its chaotic past and neighbours, Lee Kuan Yew argued,
the tiny country could not afford the risks associated
with liberal democracy.
In the past that argument was largely taken at face value
by the Chinese working class, despite the experiences of
other Asian nations that contradicted it.
Today,
however, there is more apathy than agreement. No one
seriously questions the PAP’s track record of
governance or probity of its top leaders, yet trust is
giving way to resentment at the party’s arrogance.
The
main proof is in the erosion of the party’s
share of the popular vote in elections. In 2006, it hit
66.6%, down from 75% in 2001, and 75.6% in 1980.
In the past, opposition parties deliberately refrained
from contesting more than half of the seats, since they
found that while some Singaporeans wanted to cast a protest
vote, they would not vote for the opposition if there was
any chance the PAP would be thrown out of office.
But in
2006, the opposition contest 47 of 84 seats, suggesting
that the PAP’s hold on voters’ loyalty is not
as fearsome as before.
Why is this? For one thing, Singaporeans are better versed
in critical thinking. During the 1980s and '90s, people
may have grown wealthy, but they remained politically unsophisticated.
Development happened so quickly that it took decades for
education levels to catch up.
According to the government statistics, between 1990 and
2005 the percentage of the population with a university
degree grew to 17% from 4.5%.
That is matched by an even
more dramatic shift in individual age cohorts — in
2005, 32.1% of 30-34 year olds had a university degree,
as compared to just 6.6% of 50-54 year olds.
The language spoken at home is now predominantly English,
meaning that Singaporeans are increasingly able to learn
about and interact with the outside world.
Moreover, the PAP has pushed the economic structure of
the country in a direction that is no longer win-win for
all classes.
A certain
amount of economic inequality is tolerable as long as
there is a sense that everyone’s
lives are improving. But inequality and real hardship
are on the
rise, as inflation running at 6.5% erases the 3.3% wage
gains that the poorest tenth of the population enjoyed
last year, even as the top tenth picked up an 11.1% increase
in income.
PAP
loyalists control a lucrative web of government-linked
companies, while ministers have also
picked up big pay
rises, since their salaries are indexed to the private
sector, making them some of the world’s highest paid
politicians.
Scholars predominate
As for social mobility, the top scholarships, which are
a ticket into the elite, increasingly go to students from
wealthy families that live in private apartments, rather
than public housing.
Despite this trend, the PAP is unwilling to dismantle
its policies of holding wages low in order to attract multinational
companies to invest.
This
was a strategy born of necessity in the 1960s, when Singapore
was short of capital and struggling
to catch
up with Hong Kong’s model of creating an export-oriented
growth.
Today it is economically obsolete, yet it suits the government
politically because the combination of state-owned companies
and politically quiescent multinationals prevents the emergence
of an independent commercial class that might push for
political change.
The result is a top-down economy which is running up against
the limits of its capacity to drive growth.
Without
an entrepreneurial class and successful home-grown companies,
Singapore’s productivity
growth has historically lagged behind that of its laissez-faire
twin, Hong Kong.
As University of Chicago economist Alwyn Young showed
in a 1992 paper, Singapore had one of the lowest returns
on physical capital in the world.
Its growth has been fueled
by forced savings programs shoveling ever increasing amounts
of capital into the furnace, rather than by innovation
or managerial efficiency.
Diffuse dissatisfaction? - Give away money
Mr.
Lee’s administration has found
that the only way to defuse public dissatisfaction is
to do something
the PAP consistently condemned as the hallmark of Western
democracies: Give away money.
The government used to damn
welfare as a dirty word, yet transfer spending is on the
rise.
This
year, $2.1b in giveaways were planned. Then last month
Mr. Lee announced a 50% increase, totaling
$179.8m,
in utility rebates and “growth dividends” — cash
payments to households that started in 2006.
The
new prime minister has brought in other social spending
programs for the poor. For instance in
the 2008 budget,
the Ministry of Manpower’s expenditure rose by 184%,
almost entirely due to a new scheme of workfare, the $306
million Income Security Policy Programme.
The
pressure for more entitlements will only grow as retirees
find that their savings do not
provide enough of a cushion.
The compulsory government-run Central Provident Fund sucked
up a huge percentage of income to finance the state’s
development goals, but offered dismally low returns.
As a result, many of the generation that built the Singapore
miracle now finds itself eking out a retirement in public
housing while the government surpluses remain under the
management of the PAP.
Beside the carrot, there is also a stick. Starting in
1985, the PAP began to warn voters that if they supported
the opposition, their government-built apartment buildings
would not get priority for maintenance.
This was gradually refined to the point that in 1997,
then Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong explicitly campaigned
on the promise that individual precincts would get housing
renovation spending according to their votes. When the
US State Department condemned this as undemocratic, the
interference of foreigners was used as another rallying
cry.
Indeed, it seems that Singapore is increasingly cursed
with the shortcomings of a democracy without enjoying the
benefits.
During
the 2006 campaign, Prime Minister Lee inadvertently blurted
out his fears of what would
happen if there were
more opposition members of parliament: “Instead of
spending my time thinking what is the right policy for
Singapore, I’m going to spend all my time thinking
what’s the right way to fix them, to buy my supporters’ votes….”
Putting
aside the ominous sound of “fixing” opponents,
the remark was ironic because the PAP now expends so much
effort to buy the support of the populace with giveaways,
all in order to avoid the transparency and accountability
that a vibrant opposition would bring.
Some younger Singaporeans with skills respond to this
by voting with their feet, moving abroad to find greater
freedom and a higher standard of living working with the
kind of entrepreneurial companies that Singapore has yet
to create.
In order to eventually win some of them back, the possibility
of recognising dual nationality is increasingly discussed,
a move that would represent a huge concession for a nation-building
party that demands self-reliance and sacrifice of its citizenry.
In
the place of the émigrés,
foreign workers are flooding in to man the factories,
docks and construction
sites, as the government steadily opens the doors wider.
Foreign workers already account for more than one million
of the total population of 4.6 million.
Among the immigrants are talented individuals like the
Chinese table tennis players who provided the country with
its first Olympic medal last month. But they lack the loyalty
to the country that the PAP has put a premium on.
If Singapore were a plural democracy, it would no doubt
have developed an independent civil society capable of
binding together the native-born and immigrants, providing
mutual support.
But the PAP and Lee Kuan Yew are like the
African baobab tree, whose spreading canopy hogs the sun
and prevents other trees from growing up underneath.
Alienated, rootless society
Such
a society may be easier to control, but it is also alienated
and rootless, jealous of others’ gains—the
oft-quoted national characteristic, kiasu, literally means “fear
of losing.” In a developed economy that depends on
attracting and retaining creative individuals, this has
become a significant handicap.
The
arrogance of the winners in society is becoming a major
issue. The elder Mr. Lee’s
ego is legendary, but given his accomplishments it is
perhaps understandable.
When
his minions take on similar airs, however, it is a different
story. In one extreme example
two years ago,
a furor erupted after the daughter of MP Wee Siew Kim used
her blog to berate a man afraid of losing his job as “one
of many wretched, undermotivated, overassuming leeches
in our country” who should “get out of my elite
uncaring face.” To make matters worse, Mr. Wee tried
to defend her remarks.
Naturally the PAP is aware of these trends and that its
monopoly on power has become an important issue in itself.
Over the years it has tried to come up with mechanisms
for citizens to register their complaints and blow off
steam.
The
government no longer seeks to destroy all opposition,
leaving alone and even praising those
tame MPs who focus
on constituents’ issues rather than the PAP’s
system of social control. Yet ultimately there is no solution
to this problem, since the party is unwilling to share
power in any meaningful sense.
A siege mentality has been the hallmark of Singaporean
politics for four decades, often with good justification
given hostile neighboring governments to the north and
south.
Yet it is increasingly hard today to see how that anxiety
can be justified and maintained. The generation now coming
onto the political scene grew up in at least moderate prosperity,
and may not be so easily bullied into voting for the PAP.
It is eager to put down roots and create a civil society.
So far the PAP has finessed this aspiration without compromising
its control.
Prime Minister Lee can afford to be sanguine for now,
with the security apparatus, corporatist economy and civil
service all at his command.
Yet if this economic downturn worsens, he will be confronted
with a more difficult choice of whether to accede to demands
for greater pluralism.
As
academic Michael Haas once wrote, “Whenever the
public exercises the independence of thought that better
education brings, ‘a danger to be nipped in the bud’ or
some similar cliché is articulated as the basis
for repression.”
It
bears remembering that the laws like the Internal Security
Act that have been used in past
such exercises remain on
the books. If pushed too hard, Lee Hsien Loong still has
the means to prove he is his father’s son.
Mr. Restall is editor of the REVIEW.
http://www.feer.com/essays/2008/september/pressure-builds-on-singapores-system